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4.5 Reflecting on a Lesson Plan on Kurasa

Reflecting on a lesson plan on Kurasa allows teachers to look back at a lesson after it has been taught and record brief notes on how the lesson went. Reflection supports continuous improvement by helping teachers identify what worked well, what did not, and what can be improved in future lessons.

This feature is teacher-led and focuses purely on professional growth and better lesson delivery.

Before You Begin #

To reflect on a lesson plan:

  • You must be logged into your Kurasa workspace
  • The lesson plan must already exist
  • The lesson should have already been taught

Reflection is done from the Lesson Plans section.


🎥Video Tutorial: Reflecting on a Lesson Plan #

This video shows how to open a lesson plan and add reflection remarks after teaching.

Step-by-Step: Reflecting on a Lesson Plan #

Step 1: Open the Lesson Plans Section #

  • Click Lesson Plans under the Teacher section
  • Select All Lesson Plans

This displays all lesson plans you have created.


Step 2: Select the Lesson Plan #

  • Use the filters to locate the lesson you taught
  • Click on the lesson plan
  • Select View Details

Step 3: Open the Remarks Section #

  • Scroll within the lesson plan details
  • Locate the remarks section
  • Click to expand the remarks field

This section is used to record reflections after teaching.


Step 4: Write Your Reflection #

In the remarks field, briefly note:

  • What worked well during the lesson
  • What did not go as planned
  • Learner responses or challenges
  • What you would adjust next time

Reflections should be short, honest, and practical.


Step 5: Save the Reflection #

  • Click Submit or Save

Your reflection is now saved and linked to the lesson plan.


Why Lesson Reflection Matters #

Reflecting on lesson plans helps teachers:

  • Improve lesson delivery over time
  • Respond better to learner needs
  • Adjust teaching strategies
  • Strengthen CBC-aligned practice

Reflection is a personal teaching tool, not a performance measure.


Good Reflection Practices #

  • Reflect soon after teaching while details are fresh
  • Focus on learner engagement and understanding
  • Keep reflections clear and concise
  • Use reflections to improve future lesson plans

What’s Next #

After reflecting on a lesson plan, you can:

  • Adjust upcoming lesson plans
  • Clone improved lesson plans for reuse
  • Manage lesson plans across weeks and terms

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